
Saving Malawis Children Madonna first visited Malawi in April 2006. Shes been there twice since, including a trip last October to adopt her son, David, who was then suffering from malaria and pneumonia. Through her Raising Malawi organization, Madonna is helping to foster sustainable solutions for the Malawian people, especially its most defenseless children. Shes also working on a documentary about the orphans of Malawi. Below are excerpts from her conversation with Dr. Jim Yong Kim, a founder of Partners in Health, which provides medical care and social services to the worlds poorest patients. Dr. Kim is currently based at Brigham and Womens Hospital and Harvard University. He works to bring good medicine to people without access; his campaigns have helped increase aids treatment in Africa eightfold. Madonna: A lot of people ask me, Why did you choose Malawi? I always say that Malawi chose me. Victoria Keelan, a businesswoman who was born and raised in Malawi, contacted me through a mutual friend and said, Look, if youre in the business of helping children, we have over a million orphans here in Malawi, and the problem is insane. Its an emergency. They need your help. She reached out to me because I do a lot of fund-raising for an organization called Spirituality for Kids, which helps children in impoverished conditions everywhere in the world, whether its Palestine, or East L.A., or New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, or the Bronx, Miami, Mexico Cityall over the place. I must admit that I didnt really know where Malawi was when I first heard about the situation there. I had certainly heard about the aids pandemic in sub-Saharan Africa, and in more well-known countries like Ethiopia and Rwanda. But not Malawi. So I educated myself, and I couldnt say no, and it just seemed like a good idea. I sort of dove in. Dr. Kim: When was your first trip? Madonna: A year ago April. Ive only been there three times, but so much has happened in a year. Im thrilled because, as you know, it takes a lot of time and a lot of work to get things done. It was great to go back and see so many things manifested. But once you start turning over rocks and reaching out to help people, theres a whole avalanche coming right behind it. And it seems never-ending. But when you see the fruits of your labor, you feel like its possible. Dr. Kim: One of the things weve learned is that youve got to take lots of joy out of small victories. Thats what keeps you going. Madonna: Yes, and you have to stop fixating on things, too. I found myself getting really angry when I went into [the slums] and was visiting families or single people living with aids who were supposed to be helping with home-based care. I would talk to people through translators and find out that they were getting all the wrong medication. That drove me bonkers, and I almost ripped my hair out. Those little things get me down, but then you realize there are all these other great things happening: the Millennium Villages have surplus crops, and orphan-care centers are being built. So you have to focus on the things that are getting done. There are some kids you can help by building orphan-care centers they can visit during the day. Its a place to go, and theres food; they can have their health needs taken care of, and they can get an education. And then they can go home and sleep with their extended family. There are other orphans who are in such dire straitstheyre living on the streets, and you need to find foster homes for them, or you need to send them to private schools. And some kids just need psychosocial support to deal with the fact that theyre living with their extended family. But no ones addressing what it feels like to lose your parents, and whats going on in the heads and hearts of these kids. If theyre the future of the country, then we need to do something about it. I know that youre dealing with everything from alcoholism to orphans. There are just so many issues that need to be dealt with to raise up the level of someones existence. Dr. Kim: You mentioned alcoholism. We deal with that a lot in Russiait happens to be one of the biggest complications in treating TB there. Were doing a lot of research on alcoholism and TB. Madonna: I think theres very little difference between Moscow and Africa in some respects. Have you heard about the orphanages there? Dr. Kim: Oh, God. Theyre just terrible. Madonna: Its way more depressing in a way. Dr. Kim: When I was at W.H.O. [the World Health Organization], the director general had been to every single depressing place in the world. And the one place that just ripped his heart out was an aids orphanage in Moscow. It was the most emotionally troubling place hed ever been to. He started a fund-raising campaignhe sold all the gifts that had been given to him by all these different presidents. He put all the money into a Russian orphanage. Madonna: Oh, well, God bless him. Dr. Kim: Orphanages in general, Madonna, I have to tell you I have a child. And its just the most painful thing in the world even walking in there. Madonna: I cant take it. I cant take it. Its difficult to watch people suffer, but its so hard to watch children suffer. To see children lying on the ground in a daze, in a pool of urine with flies buzzing around their heads. Its unfathomable, and this is what the orphanage that David came from was like. Im very happy to say its not like that now, but its just devastating. And theres another nursery we go to where a lot of the children are H.I.V.-positive, and they all weigh about three pounds, and theyre all a year old. You hold these children and you think, How can I save them all, how can I make their lives better, what is their future. Its an unforgettable experience. I feel like everybody needs to take a sabbatical and go to Russia and Africa and work in orphanages and really witness true suffering. And then youll just feel ridiculous for ever complaining about anything. Everybody needs that kind of reality check. Dr. Kim: I think the second-worst thing I see on a regular basis is when parents cant feed their children. Madonna: Yes, when they cant feed their kidsand then what theyre pushed to do to feed their kids. Or just to sit and watch your child die of starvation. Its unthinkable when you consider how much we have. Orphans are sort of my main focuschildren are my main focusso I have a question for you. From a health-care perspective, what is your approach for helping orphans? Dr. Kim: Over time people have gone from just building orphanages around the aids epidemic. Theyre focusing more on preventing a generation of orphans. When people say, What do orphans need the most?, I sometimes say, tongue in cheek, Well, they need their parents more than anything else. So many children are being orphaned because of aids. Thats why we push so hard for aids treatment. Not too long ago, probably in 2000 or 2001, there were a lot of people who were still saying, H.I.V. treatment is just not possible in Africa. All those 30 million people are just going to have to die. These are very nice, well-meaning people who sort of said, Its not going to happen. Just forget about it and let them die. Thats one of the things that we took on. We insist that people get treated. The other thing is that people need the whole range of servicesnot just basic health care, but help related to early childhood development, and whether they have a loving household. Those things are also really important. The bad news is that there are a lot of orphans, and we have a lot of work to do. There isnt a single straightforward answer: Well, if they just had orphanages No, its going to be a little bit more complicated. But the really, really good news is that theres plenty of money in the world to do these things. It just takes a small percentage of the money we spend on junkand then we can invest it. Theres more than enough money to do these things. Madonna: If we would just stop spending money on killing people and start spending money on saving people? Dr. Kim: Why not? Madonna: [Laughs] It seems so simple. Dr. Kim: Ive looked at what youre doing with Raising Malawi. What would you like to see happen in the next five years? What do you want to see there as a result of the work of Raising Malawi? Madonna: First of all, Id like to know that were getting a handle on the aids epidemic. Some people say that weve stabilized it, that the numbers are not increasing. I spoke to a woman who is the director of the ministry responsible for women and childrens development, and she said that, according to studies, its impossible to really know how many are sick, because theres such a stigma attached to being H.I.V.-positive. If people know they have it, they dont tell you. And the other thing is, its so hard for a lot of people to get tested. If you go into most villages and orphanages and ask, How many of the people in this village are infected?, theyll say, Oh, 70 to 75 percent. Then you ask, Well, how many people have actually been tested?, and they say, Not even one! So its very hard to gauge, and there are a lot of elements that work against it. Its not enough to just make ARVs [anti-retrovirals] more accessible; its not enough to help diversify their crops; its not enough to bring in the educational component, whether its health education or just education in general. You still have to deal with traditional practices, which, especially in the more remote of Malawian places, have a huge stronghold. Some people still think that their illnesses are curses and spells that other people have put on them. Even if you give them a cure and they get better, theyll still insist it was a spell somebody put on them. Dr. Kim: Paul [Farmer, the medical anthropologist who works to raise the standard of health care for the worlds destitute] tells this great story about a woman he was treating for TB. She came every day, took all her medicines, and got better. Being an anthropologist, he was compelled to ask her, What do you think caused your tuberculosis? And she had this long explanation that had everything to do with sorcery. So Paul said, But if you believe sorcery caused your TB, why did you take all your medicines? And she put her hand on her hip and said, My dear, are you incapable of complexity? People think that if medicines are making them better, you should do that and talk to the voodoo priest. Cover all your bases. Madonna: To me, the most important thingaside from meeting peoples physical needs, whether thats education, health care, clothing, food, a roof over their headsis changing the mind-set and educating people. And most of all, most important, is empowering people and making them self-sustaining. I want to continue to see that aspect changing and flourishing and growing. I want to see girls with educations. I think women are the future of Africa. I hate to sound like Im being sexist, but I interviewed a lot of women, and found, while watching a rough cut of my documentary, which is very far from being finished, that the people who are really doing the most to effect change in Africa right now are all women. Theyre the future. So I want girls everywhere to get an education. After the English came and went in Malawi, after three decades of dictatorship and several more years of corrupt government, I feel like everyone in Malawi is walking around with this feeling like, How can I make a difference in my country? How can my point of view be heard? Im a nobody, I dont have any say, I dont have a point of view. I want to get rid of this inferiority complex. I want to help them to believe in themselves, to empower them. Thats really what I want to see in the next five years. Id love to see growth in all areas. You cant just go into a place and say, O.K., Im going to fix it with this one solution. Thats naive and impossible. Dr. Kim: What do you think its going to take to get more Americans engaged with all these problems? Madonna: Thats part of the reason Im making the documentary. I want people to be moved, to feel called to action. Thats what I want to do. Americans live in a bubble, for the most part. I say that from my house in London. [Laughs] But obviously Im an American, and Ive spent most of my life there. Were very privileged as Americansits easy to forget about the rest of the world and to think that your problems are the most important problems. Even poor people in America live better than poor people most everywhere else. I can remember being poor and living on the streets in New York back in the day. But you could still scrounge up a dollar and go to Kentucky Fried Chicken, you know what I mean? Being poor in Africa is something people in America cant relate to. Part of the challenge is bringing that reality to people and moving them. You have to arouse compassion. But, like Al Gores movie, An Inconvenient Truth, its not enough to raise awareness. You have to give people solutions, and you have to invite them to get involved in whatever way they can, whether thats doing volunteer work or taking a portion of their salary and figuring out where they want that money to go. You have to find ways to inspire people to get involved. Look, it happened with me. Obviously, I know whats going on in Africa, and Ive contributed money to various funds over the years. But until you go there and you see it and experience it, it just feels like a problem thats somewhere in the distance, and it doesnt really affect you. So youre not moved to do anything about it. Dr. Kim: How are you going to bring your art together with this? Do you see the two efforts coming together somehow? Madonna: Im making a documentary about the orphans in Malawi. And its not really about just Malawi; its about all of Africa, because Malawi shares a lot of the same problems with other countries. Making a film is an expression of my art, and I believe Im going to connect to people that way, as a parent and a human being of this world. I want to appeal to peoples sense of humanity and interconnectedness. I feel like I have the platform Im standing on for a reason. Its not just to make people happy and get people to dance and sing, to feel an escape. Its also to get people to listen and to bring important issues to the forefront. With the success Ive had and the position Ive earned in the world, people are listening to me, so Id better have something important to say.
source : vanityfair.com